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Constitutional Amendment

Monday, January 7, 2013

Woodbury Rep. Kieffer: Make it Tougher to Get Constitutional Amendments on the Ballot

The Republican wants the state to require a three-fifths vote rather than a simple majority for the ballot initiatives.

Rep. Andrea Kieffer plans to introduce a bill that would require a three-fifths vote of the Legislature before putting a proposed amendment to the state Constitution on the ballot, rather than a simple majority. “If it’s important enough to change the Constitution, it needs to have bipartisan support,” said Kieffer, a Republican from Woodbury. Specifically, Kieffer said she has issues with amendments tied to state finances, listing the 2008 passage of the Clean Water, Land and Water Legacy Amendment as an example. Other states have similar thresholds in place for constitutional ballot initiatives, she said, and some require passage during two legislative sessions. The November 2012 ballot had two proposed amendments to the Constitution, …

Irving

12:34 pm on Monday, January 7, 2013

Making it harder to pass an amendment sounds like a very good idea. Of course, if it were up to me I would first pass an amendment that required a supermajority to pass any bill that increased the cost of government and required only 40% approval to pass any bill that decreased the cost of government.   more ›

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Lillie Proposes Plan To End Government Shutdowns

Joined by other GOP lawmakers on Thursday, the senator who represents Woodbury said the measure would revert state spending to previous levels in the event of a budget impasse.

A group of Republican lawmakers today announced a plan that would effectively end state government shutdowns. Under the proposal, if a budget agreement isn’t reached by the end of the legislative session, funding for state services would continue at previous levels. Twelve other states have similar laws on the books, said Sen. Ted Lillie, who was joined by Sen. Paul Gazelka, Sen. Ted Daley and Rep. Kathy Lohmer during a 15-minute press conference at the Capitol on July 21. The plan—similar to a bill Lt. Gov. Yvonne Prettner Solon proposed as a state senator in 2006—has several permutations, including reverting state spending to 80-100 percent of previous levels or enacting the measure through a constitutional amendment. The longest …

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Kris Janisch

7:41 am on Friday, July 22, 2011

Wish we could have these kinds of productive discussions on every story. Thanks guys.   more ›

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